Smarter ways to counter hackers

NEW DELHI, INDIA: Indusface, has identified five notorious habits of web application hackers that can help you understand their strategies and devise smarter ways to counter them.

1. Finding Dark Motivation

According to results from the “Cyber crime Survey Report 2014,” 58 pc attacks happen for financial gains. Malicious damage, competitor grudge, and ethical reasons are some of the other popular motivators to cyber crimes. While online business websites are at highest risk of hacking, public sector isn’t safer either.

Detecting weaknesses or vulnerabilities in web application architecture is the first step for any hacker. It helps him analyze if a certain website is exploitable.

Countermeasure:

The only smarter way to stay one-step ahead of the hackers is to detect vulnerabilities with an even smarter web application scanner.

3. Analyzing Logical Weaknesses

Modern apps are continuously changing with new vectors coming in and you can never really predict that a hacker might find handy. While automated programs can find basic vulnerabilities, it requires an analytical human mind to look for logical weaknesses.

Countermeasure:

Business logic flaws can only detected and mended by people who understand how such exploitations work. Manual penetration testing from application security experts is the best way to find such vulnerabilities before hackers.

4. Exploiting Weaknesses

It has been estimated that businesses lose annually $3.8 million annually to cyber exploitations. In fact, in the past few months, large online song portal and taxi-for-hire websites have been hacked using vulnerabilities like SQL Injection.

Countermeasure:

After vulnerability detection, patching application source code is not always possible for many reasons. For continuous protection, web application firewall is a feasible solution that not only prevents attacks but also provides data on attack attempts. It helps learn more about techniques that attackers use and then framing better policies to detect and protect web applications.

5. All-Out Service Denial

Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) is an exploitation that all web applications are vulnerable to. Under a DDoS attack, users are unable to access the websiteas the server is busy processing requests from bots before it crashes completely. In fact, there have been reports of DDoS attacks lasting for weeks, costing millions for companies. Hackers often ask for ransom in lieu of stopping such attacks. In other scenarios, they just want to disrupt performance out of grudge or rivalry.

Countermeasure:

Distributed denial-of-service attacks can only be stopped with constant monitoring. Managed security experts have to look for attack patterns based on malicious IPs, machine fingerprints, and bot signature and create custom rules to block them and prevent DDoS attack before it can cause any harm.